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Jack Gallagher (historian)

John Andrew Gallagher, known as Jack Gallagher, was an historian of the British Empire who between 1963 and 1970 held the Beit Professorship of Commonwealth History at the University of Oxford and from 1971 until his death was the Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval History at the University of Cambridge.

Early life and career
Gallagher was born in Birkenhead on 1 April 1919. His father was Irish. After schooling at the Birkenhead Institute, he proceeded to Trinity College, Cambridge, as a history scholar, and with the outbreak of the Second World War he joined the Royal Tank Regiment, eventually serving in Italy, Greece, and North Africa. After the end of the war, Gallagher returned to Cambridge to complete his studies and was elected a Fellow of Trinity College in 1948. ==Scholarship==
Scholarship
Gallagher's influential work Africa and the Victorians: The Official Mind of Imperialism, was co-authored with Ronald Robinson (with the help of Alice Denny) and first published in 1961. This was preceded by a widely read article, also co-authored with Robinson, "The Imperialism of Free Trade". Published in 1953, the latter constitutes a groundbreaking essay among theorists of imperial expansion and "is reputedly the most cited historical article ever published". Robinson and Gallagher argued that the New Imperialism of the 1880s, especially the Scramble for Africa, was a continuation of a long-term policy in which informal empire, based on the principles of free trade, was favoured over formal imperial control. The article helped launch the Cambridge School of historiography. ==Personal life==
Personal life
Gallagher was strongly-left wing in his youth, and whilst an undergraduate at Cambridge he was a convenor of the 'colonial group' of the university's Communist Party. The historian Eric Hobsbawm, a fellow student communist, described Gallagher as "brilliant, original and self-destructive", claiming that he never got out of bed before midday. Gallagher, who remained unmarried, died from heart failure and kidney failure in Cambridge on 5 March 1980. ==Works==
Works
Africa and the Victorians: The Climax of Imperialism in the Dark Continent written with Ronald Robinson and Alice Denny (London, Macmillan, 1961) and Africa and the Victorians: The Climax of Imperialism in the Dark Continent (New York, St Martin's Press, 1961) • The Decline, Revival and Fall of the British Empire. The Ford Lectures and Other Essays edited by Anil Seal (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1982) ==See also==
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